Russia's Putin orders military complete Arctic plan by year end
President
Vladimir Putin ordered Russia's military to increase its focus on the Arctic and finish plans by
the end of the year to upgrade military bases in the resource-rich region where
world powers jostle for control.
Speaking
to Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, Putin praised the military's work in theArctic, where Canada said on
Monday it was claiming the North Pole as part of an broader claim on the
region.
The
United States, Denmark and Norway are also pressing for
control of what they consider their fair share of massive untapped oil and natural gas reserves."I
request that you pay special attention to the deployment of infrastructure and
military units in the Arctic," Putin said, speaking at a Defense Ministry
board meeting."By
the end of the year it is planned - and I expect it will be done ... the
renewal of the Tiksi airfield and completion of construction work
on the Severomorsk-1 airfield," he said in televised comments.Russia has already completed work on renovating an
airfield on the Novosibirsk Islands, Putin said, which was abandoned in 1993.
Earlier this year Moscow sent 10 warships and four icebreakers to the islands
in a show of force. Underscoring
Moscow's sensitivity over Arctic claims, Russia arrested 30 people on
board a Greenpeace ship during a September protest against Russian offshore
Arctic drilling. They now face charges carrying seven year jail sentences.Putin
said earlier this week that Russia's military presence in the Arctic was needed
to protect against potential threats from the United States.The
U.S. Geological Survey says the Arctic contains 30 percent of the world's
undiscovered natural gas and
15 percent of oil.The
world's largest oil producer, Russia expects to see oil output
decline at its mainstay western Siberian oilfields in coming years and has
looked further afield to potential Arctic reserves.Russia,
Canada and Denmark all say an underwater mountain range known as the Lomonosov
Ridge, which stretches 1,800 km (1,120 miles) across the pole under the Arctic
Sea, is part of their own landmass.

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